QUOTE(Berzerker @ Jan 16 2008, 03:25 AM)

And you have a less stable iPod. I updated to full 1.1.3 and I'm happy with it. I found no need to keep my jailbroken 1.1.2 so I pushed the upgrade. I find that my iPod is crashing apps WAY less than when it was jailbroken (even with no apps installed, no changes to anything, just first time jailbreak), and it's much faster. I also get features that I used most on the jailbroken 1.1.2 (mostly the iPhone apps, Notes, Mail, and Weather) with an iPod warranty supported 1.1.3. I don't even think I will be jailbreaking 1.1.3 when/if it comes out.
Totally agree. I got fed up with a buggy Jailbroken Touch that crashed on me at least twice. I could restore it, but then I had to ftp over the iPhone apps, reset the permissions, reload the music/podcasts. And for WHAT? Basically to get the iPhone apps. I'm not sure what the "tons of other features" the poster was talking about. For my money there was the Podcast downloader and a lot of programs that didn't really do much useful(to me there were a lot of programs that showed things could be done, but none of them added any useful functionality, and if they added some there use was usually cumbersome). What good is having programs like a terminal when functionally you don't have any programs to do anything to with them? It is almost 6 months after the iPhone was released, and I count ONE non-Apple app(Mobilecast) that actually does something that adds function to the Touch/iPhone, and lately there has been NOTHING. I think we see the limits of Jailbreaking, and need to realize that official SDK apps are the way to go for the near future. Hopefully Apple has been watching and realizes the potential of the Touch/iPhone and allows real computer apps to be written for them. I don't begrudge the folks who want to Jailbreak - it is a fun hobby, and I enjoyed being able to see what I could do with my Touch. But if you just want a device that works with fewer headaches, I don't think you lose anything(except arguably $20, which I can't find a lot of sympathy for since you paid $300-400 for a toy you didn't need in the first place), and I think you gain the confidence of knowing you won't have to reenter 3 months of calendar entries like I did the last time my Touch crashed.And I have only had a few hours to play with it, but the my 1.1.3 Touch & iPhone apps does seem faster than my Jailbroken 1.1.1.Here is an interesting bonus to upgrading after jailbreaking - all of my settings(email, stock quotes, weather location) from my Jailbroken iPhone apps showed up intact when I installed my 1.1.3 update and the versions of the apps I legally downloaded from iTunes today!